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  2. Boxing styles and technique - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boxing_styles_and_technique

    Boxing techniques utilize very forceful strikes with the hand. There are many bones in the hand, and striking surfaces without proper technique can cause serious hand injuries. Today, most trainers do not allow boxers to train and spar without hand/wrist wraps and gloves.

  3. Orthodox stance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orthodox_stance

    Orthodox stance is the most common stance in boxing [3] and MMA [4] for its superior power generation by right-handed fighters. However, the stance also finds usage from some left-handed fighters, too, owing to some of the advantages it has in general, as well as for the left-handed in particular.

  4. Boxing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boxing

    The modern boxing stance differs substantially from the typical boxing stances of the 19th and early 20th centuries. The modern stance has a more upright vertical-armed guard, as opposed to the more horizontal, knuckles-facing-forward guard adopted by early 20th century hook users such as Jack Johnson.

  5. Irish martial arts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irish_martial_arts

    Charlie Mitchell demonstrating the traditional bare knuckle boxing stance. Dornálaíocht is the Irish word for boxing, dorn meaning fist.. The style or stance used in dornálaíocht, a form of bare-knuckle boxing, is sometimes reflected in Irish caricatures such as that of the Notre Dame Leprechaun.

  6. Bare-knuckle boxing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bare-knuckle_boxing

    The traditional bare-knuckle boxing stance was actually designed to combat against the use of grappling as well as block punching. [18] Kicking was also allowed in boxing at that time, with William "Bendigo" Thompson being an expert in kicks during his fight with Ben Caunt , [ 19 ] and the Lancanshire Navigator using purring kicks in his battle ...

  7. Southpaw stance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southpaw_stance

    Al McCoy, world champion in the 1910s, displaying southpaw stance with right hand and right foot to the fore Ruslan Chagaev in southpaw stance. In boxing and some other sports, a southpaw stance is a stance in which the boxer has the right hand and the right foot forward, leading with right jabs, and following with a left cross right hook.

  8. Stance (martial arts) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stance_(martial_arts)

    Pankratiast in fighting stance, Ancient Greek red-figure amphora, 440 BC. In martial arts, stances are the distribution, foot orientation and body positions (particularly the legs and torso) adopted when attacking, defending, advancing, or retreating. In many Asian martial arts, the most widely used stance is a shallow standing squat. This ...

  9. Peek-a-boo (boxing style) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peek-a-boo_(boxing_style)

    Peek-a-boo is a boxing style which received its common name for the defensive hand position, which are normally placed in front of the face, [1] [2] like in the baby's game of the same name. The technique is thought to offer extra protection to the face while making it easier to jab the opponent's face.